SCOTUS on DOMA

UPDATE 3/26 @10:53am ~ Came across this study on what marriage/divorce/child-bearing looks like after 10 years of same-sex marriage in the Netherlands.  Being the first nation to do it, they are the closest thing we have to a real-life lab on this matter. Result?  It ain’t good if you’re a “marriage equality” advocate.  And by the way:  If you use that term (“marriage equality”) around me I’ll clock you one.  It’s silly & annoying.
Below is a brilliantly delineated path forward from The Wall Street Journal for the Supreme Court to navigate the rocky shoals of the same-sex marriage arguments it will hear next week.  It’s kinda dense reading for the non-lawyer (like me!) to fully apprehend, but take your time, and really try to digest the nuance of each argument.  It’s worth it.

Now, parenthetically, for what it’s worth, and for those who care and are unfamiliar with my views on the matter, they are this: Civil unions between one human being and one other human being of the same sex, who are unrelated, is fine & dandy with me. If you are lucky enough to find someone to love you through a lifetime, it seems to you should fall down on your knees and thank the Higher Power of your choice that someone is willing to enter into such a magnificent covenant with you – just don’t call it “marriage” – because it’s not.  You are absolutely entitled to have all of the legal responsibilities and benefits of  marriage – as a matter of law – but in terms of a societal or cultural imprimatur, or stamp of approval, no.  Call it something else.  

Understand:  I will not give you the stink-eye, shun, or otherwise refuse to associate with you.  My children have friends who have married same-sex parents whom I regard with very high esteem and extremely warm affection.  They are welcome in my home, at my table, and I am glad to have their embrace whenever I see them.  Further, I trust them absolutely with the care of my children at their homes.  They are lovely, lovely, people.

But it’s not a marriage they have.  It’s something else.

So, that’s where I stand, for what it’s worth.

And below, via WSJ, is the best argument I’ve seen yet for the path forward.  It’s brilliant.  It preserves legal, constitutional integrity while passing no moral judgement whatsoever on same sex unions, all while preserving the individual liberty to live and let live.  That’s a pretty neat trick.

Here’s where you could change my mind – sort of:  If someday, all 50 states decide that same-sex unions are lawful – literally, having voted them into law – then, and only then, should the Supreme Court step off the balance beam – but I would still withhold labeling them “marriage” for purposes of federal law.  The “label” question, it seems to me, should be left to society; via secular and religious consensus.

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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Michael McConnell: The Constitution and Same-Sex Marriage

By MICHAEL MCCONNELL

For most Americans, the Supreme Court cases being heard on Tuesday and Wednesday next week are about same-sex marriage. But the cases—Hollingsworth v. Perry (the Proposition 8 case from California) and U.S. v. Windsor (the Defense of Marriage Act case)—also are a test of the nation’s democratic and decentralized constitutional structure. These cases thus are not just about marriage. They are about how we reach decisions regarding matters of deep moral significance in our federal republic.
We learned from Roe v. Wade that the Supreme Court endangers its own legitimacy and exacerbates social conflict when it seeks to resolve moral-legal questions on which the country is deeply divided without a strong basis in the text of the Constitution. The court sometimes intervenes when the legislatures of the 50 states are approaching a consensus. When it jumps into a live political controversy, the justices look like they are acting like legislators.
The system today, without the Supreme Court’s intervention, is working as it should. Representatives of the people are deliberating. “We the People” are thinking. So far, nine states have extended marriage to same-sex couples; many others have chosen to explicitly endorse traditional marriage. Those choices distress advocates on either side of the matter when their wishes have been disappointed.
But when all of us have an equal right to be heard on an issue, and to participate through our representatives in making the decision, it is easier to accept the outcome than when unelected judges make moral pronouncements from the bench. Change that comes through the political process has greater democratic legitimacy.
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Moreover, in states where same-sex marriage has been made legal, legislatures have taken care to provide generous protections for people and institutions—especially churches—that conscientiously disagree. This is good for civic harmony and for achieving a long-term position of mutual respect. A judicial decision likely would not include these protections.
The two cases that will be argued next week seem to endanger this process. If the justices hold that California’s Proposition 8, which provides that “only marriage between a woman and a man is valid or recognized,” is unconstitutional, this will end the deliberations and impose a single national definition of marriage on us all. The court cannot reach this outcome without branding the views of the other side as either “irrational,” if it employs the lower, rational-basis level of judicial scrutiny, or “bigoted” and hateful, which would justify heightened judicial scrutiny. That is not the path to national reconciliation, and it does not show respect to the diverse views on this divisive issue.
But if the justices hold that there is no constitutional right to same-sex marriage, this also imposes an answer of a sort. It would reflect the Supreme Court’s considered judgment that in the eyes of the Constitution, same-sex relationships may be treated as morally different from (and inferior to) heterosexual relationships. Such a decision would set a precedent for the foreseeable future. It would embolden opponents of same-sex marriage and deprive proponents of one of their most potent moral claims in the political process—that the denial of marriage rights offends American values of equality.
Even though the stage seems set for a momentous ruling by the court, the litigation actually offers the justices a golden opportunity to resolve these cases without setting a precedent either way, and to reaffirm the ideal of democratic, decentralized decision-making.
In Hollingsworth, the Proposition 8 case, the state of California has declined to defend the state’s own law. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals allowed a group of private citizens, proponents of the proposition, to step in and defend the law in court. Former Solicitor General Walter Dellinger, who served under President Clinton, has filed a friend of the court brief arguing persuasively that these intervenors do not have standing to sue (meaning they have no legal stake in the issue, but only political interest). He has precedent on his side. More than 25 years ago, in Diamond v. Charles, the court held that a pro-life doctor did not have standing to defend an antiabortion law in court when the state attorney general refused to do so. The same lack of standing is true here.
If Mr. Dellinger is right (and I think he is), the Supreme Court has no jurisdiction to decide the Proposition 8 case, and neither did the Ninth Circuit. The court should vacate the decision striking down Proposition 8, leaving in place the original district-court order that prompted the case by allowing two same-sex couples to marry, but deprivingHollingsworth of precedential effect.
In Windsor, the Defense of Marriage Act case, the government also declines to defend its law, but the U.S. Solicitor General, unlike the California attorney general, filed a notice of appeal and a petition for review, and the government is continuing to enforce the law. That preserves the Supreme Court’s jurisdiction to decide the constitutionality of DOMA.
But the court need not base its decision in Windsor on the merits of the same-sex marriage question. The leading argument against DOMA all along has been that the federal government lacks authority under the Constitution to create and enforce a definition of marriage different from that of the state in which a couple resides. It is hard to think of an issue more clearly reserved to state law under constitutional tradition than the definition of marriage.
The court has held that “regulation of domestic relations” has “long been regarded as a virtually exclusive province of the States” (Sosna v. Iowa, 1975). In the past, the court has recognized a “domestic relations exception” to federal judicial power. Although the legal question is close, the court could take the same path in Windsor—holding that DOMA improperly intrudes on the reserved powers of the states.
If the court dismisses the Proposition 8 case on standing grounds and strikes DOMA down on federalism grounds, the combined effect would be to reaffirm America’s democratic, decentralized decision-making process without imposing an answer—one way or the other—to the same-sex marriage question.
By taking such a path, the court would be spared from imposing a single nationwide definition of marriage as a matter of constitutional law, and from having to rule, for all time, that there is or is not a constitutional right to same-sex marriage—a momentous step that some justices might be reluctant to take. It would leave the issue to the states, at least for the time being. This course might appeal to centrist justices like Anthony Kennedy, John Roberts and Stephen Breyer—and perhaps could even command a unanimous court, which would have a welcome calming influence on the nation’s culture wars.
Considerations of these sorts have long been part of the virtue of judicial modesty, too often undervalued by partisans on both sides. In this instance, modesty requires no more than that the justices follow the technicalities of the law.

Mr. McConnell, a former federal judge, is a law professor and director of the Constitutional Law Center at the Stanford Law School, and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.

A version of this article appeared March 22, 2013, on page A15 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: The Constitution and Same-Sex Marriage.

Obama Unleaded

UPDATE II BELOW @9:55am THU 3/21

UPDATE I BELOW @2:36pm WED 3/20

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Obama’s first Presidential trip to Israel isn’t exactly off to an auspicious start.  His driver filled the diesel-run Presidential limo with gasoline and the advance team had shoes thrown at them and 90% of Israelis listening to his first utterances upon prancing down the stairs of AF1 will probably hear his remarks as I’ve translated/commented on them below:

I want to begin right now, by answering a question that is sometimes asked about our relationship — why? Why does the United States stand so strongly, so firmly with the State of Israel? And the answer is simple. We stand together because we share a common story — patriots determined “to be a free people in our land,” pioneers who forged a nation, heroes who sacrificed to preserve our freedom, and immigrants from every corner of the world who renew constantly our diverse societies.

–Uh… Okay. That’s not the most full-throated summary of our alliance but it’s a start…

We stand together because we are democracies. For as noisy and messy as it may be, we know that democracy is the greatest form of government ever devised by man.

–Wrong, Mr. President. The United States of America is NOT a democracy. We are a constitutional republic. Mob rule does NOT describe the the civic framework of either Israel or America.

We stand together because it makes us more prosperous. Our trade and investment create jobs for both our peoples. Our partnerships in science and medicine and health bring us closer to new cures, harness new energy and have helped transform us into high-tech hubs of our global economy.

–Right. Got it. Intimate that the Jews are greedy and it’s in their financial self-interest to partner with us. And they make their mothers proud by being doctors… Wow.

We stand together because we share a commitment to helping our fellow human beings around the world. When the earth shakes and the floods come, our doctors and rescuers reach out to help. When people are suffering, from Africa to Asia, we partner to fight disease and overcome hunger.

–And the only reason that’s okay is because we show up when disaster strikes. If not for that, we’d just be a bunch of filthy greedy money-changers. Got it.

And we stand together because peace must come to the Holy Land. For even as we are clear-eyed about the difficulty, we will never lose sight of the vision of an Israel at peace with its neighbors.

–If only Israel weren’t “occupying” Palestine, right Mr. President….?

So as I begin this visit, let me say as clearly as I can –the United States of America stands with the State of Israel because it is in our fundamental national security interest to stand with Israel. It makes us both stronger. It makes us both more prosperous. And it makes the world a better place. (Applause.)

–So as I begin this visit, let me say as clearly as I can –the United States of America – NOT ME PERSONALLY – stands with the State of Israel because:
1. We don’t get our asses blown off this way.
2. We’re greedy.
3. We can occupy anyplace we want because of 1 & 2.
4. We cover for this unconscionable imperialism by showing up when disaster strikes.

THANK YOU.

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UPDATE I – @2:36pm WED 3/20:

2013-03-20T143859Z_1246236070_GM1E93K1QU901_RTRMADP_3_ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS-OBAMA

Good God.  Will the indignities never end?  If this were Romney or Palin, MSNBC would be doubling over in laughter at the rube diplomacy being carried out… Now?  The frickin’ magnolia tree Obama brought over and just planted with Simon Peres is being dug up… Good grief.

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UPDATE II – @9:55am THU 3/21:

Oh, well thank GOD for that! P.R. crisis averted! Obama’s magnolia tree won’t be dug up!  There will be peace in the Middle East as a result, I’m sure.

RX for DC Swamp

The recent dust-up between Senators Cruz & Feinstein laid bare the problem with D.C. – Too many of these people have been in power much too long. They are completely out of touch with their constituents and covered in the mud of the corruption that comes with lobbyists’ easy money & access to them; especially once they start chairing powerful committees, as Feinstein does. And how does one get to chair a committee? Longevity… And around and around we go. The longer you are there, the more corrupt & out of touch you are, but it’s only then you get real power via committee chairmanships, which, because you are so thoroughly entrenched, you can now keep by using the lobbyist money your corruption has bought to buy your next election victory and the disgusting merry-go-round goes round and round.

This has got to stop.

Since I am against term limits (The harder solution is the right one:  an educated populace.  I embrace that we get the government we deserve.  For good or ill.  I don’t see any reason to change that. ) there’s got to be another way.  But what?

I know how.

Ready?

It’s kinda radical.

People may not like it.

But it’s do-able – and not so nuts if you just let it marinate a little before you pass judgement on it.

The advent of the digital age makes this possible:

We need to structure being a Rep or Senator like being a member of the National Guard, and function like being the President.

Let that sink in:  STRUCTURE like National Guard. FUNCTION like President.

Here’s how, with a few tweaks:

A member of the National Guard only has to put the uniform on one weekend per month. I would extend that to one week per month for the Hill. They only have to come to D.C. one week per month. That’s it. I would be HAPPY to pay for ALL their travel expenses to and from. (“I” meaning we taxpayers should happily fund this.) They can fly FIRST CLASS. Happy to pay for it. Happy to pay for them to have first class car rentals, too. Even limo service for the entire week if they want it. No problem. First class all the way. It’s a small price to pay for putting a stop in the revolving door of influence in the Capital.  It will do A LOT to break up the K Street sewer pipe that leads to the Hill.

I’m not so naive as to believe it’s a 100% cure, but it’s a start. A *big* one.  This way, if some lobby wants to bribe the House, they’ll have to pay for airfare/car/hotel/expenses to at least 215 districts around the country instead of just cab fare to 215 fancy D.C. lunches. (You know they do that, right?  They’re not allowed to meet with lobbyists on the Hill so they do it at cafes/restaurants in D.C.).

I’ll tell you what else I’d do: Condos. Bi-partisan ones. As much as the math would allow, I’d put one Republican and one Democrat in each one. FORCE them to live together. It’s only one week per month. They can manage.

Besides, they’ll be pampered: I’d build a gorgeous, gated condo complex for these 535 elected representatives of the people. Two bedroom luxury condos. First class all the way. Each bedroom would have it’s own bathroom so they don’t even have to share the bathroom. I’d do this though:  Make the bedroom big enough only for a king-sized bed.  Not even enough room for a chair.  Know why? FORCE THEM INTO THE COMMUNAL LIVING ROOM if they want to sit on a sofa and watch T.V.

Think of it this way:  If they can’t manage putting a coaster under their scotch glass so they don’t leave a ring on the table (because they WILL be charged – EXORBITANTLY – for damage to these condos & their contents) or who has to pick up the milk for morning coffee, then they can’t possibly manage anything legislatively. Let ’em negotiate the little stuff.  Baby steps.  Maybe it’ll help things on the Hill.  That’s the whole point of this little bipartisan roommate stuff.  Negotiate coasters under scotch glasses and before you know it, we’ll have a balanced budget 😉

I’d even give them daily maid service. They can even have someone doing their laundry. EVERYTHING will be done for them so they can focus entirely on the task at hand: SERVING THEIR CONSTITUENTS which they will now have to LIVE WITH 75% OF THE TIME.

I would do something else: I would keep their salaries at the present level (which I believe is $180k or around that amount) but I would index it to cost of living in their home district. It’s only fair. It just doesn’t cost as much to live in Oklahoma as it does NYC.

One more thing: I would require that they each have a personal photographer follow them during every minute of their waking hours and waiting outside wherever it is they sleep to follow them when they emerge awake (obviously we would need a rotating staff of these folks). I want them tracked.  If the photographers lack the skills to track a pol who knows how to give them a slip then fine:  we’ll pay for ex-CIA or some other similarly skilled individual who can act as photographer. I want to know if they are meeting lobbyists at Starbucks. I want documentary evidence of their every move during their waking hours. I want it posted on line so their constituents can see a “living diary” of their activities.  I want a human being and a card reader at the gate so we know their coming & going from the condo.  I want someone following them whenever they are not at home (in their condo).  I want a camera lens on them EVERY SINGLE HOUR outside the condo.

Don’t like it? The PRESIDENT has this done. WHY NOT CONGRESS? We know where the President is 24/7. He has his own photographer OUTSIDE the Residence (and even inside, to an extent). I JUST WANT THE SAME DAMNED THING FOR MY ELECTED REPRESENTATIVES.

It’s a small price to pay. In fact, I’d bet it ends up being cheaper – MUCH CHEAPER – than the current system because it will save us untold billions in wasted corrupt money.

Still don’t like it? Fine. Don’t be a member of congress. But again, the PRESIDENT has this type of coverage so why not the 535?

ADDENDUM:  Their computers, blackberries, or other hardware, will be issued by the Federal Government.  Their accounts, on these devices, will be issued & managed by the Federal Government.  THEY WILL NOT BE ALLOWED TO HAVE, ACCESS, POSSESS OR IN ANY WAY HAVE ANY OTHER DIGITAL PRESENCE ON THE INTERNET.  If they are even seen touching a computer at the Apple Store or in a public library THEY WILL BE REMOVED FROM OFFICE IMMEDIATELY AND ALL CONTENTS OF THEIR DIGITAL/PHYSICAL OFFICES TURNED OVER FOR INSPECTION.

EVERYTHING will be archived.  They will NOT have any personal internet accounts AT ALL but WILL be allowed the following:  members of their families or other VERIFIED loved ones/relatives will be ALSO be issued hardware with approved emails/accounts.  Those emails/accounts will be EXCLUDED from FOIA requests BUT they WILL be MONITORED for fraud.  We don’t want Cousin Susie actually being a lobbyist for Raytheon.  Again, the loss of privacy is the price you pay going in.  You know this is the deal and you decide before you throw your hat in the ring that you & your family consent to it.  If you don’t like it, don’t run.

Again:  This pol TOUCHING another piece of hardware is grounds for IMMEDIATE removal.  Their condos (the only place they are not subject to photography) will be monitored for foreign hardware addresses.  If they are caught using a piece of unauthorized internet-enabled hardware inside their condos THEY ARE REMOVED FROM OFFICE whether it’s their fault or not. PERIOD.  Same with their home offices, where they will now be spending 75% of their time.  Same with their homes.  Doesn’t matter if they have a teenager friend of their kid’s coming over and using the internet at their house. TOO BAD.  You lose that luxury when you become an elected pol.  If you want to have something other than federally issued internet-enabled hardware in your house YOU CAN’T. PERIOD. TOO BAD.  Tell your kids to meet their friends at the library if they want to use their friend’s iPhone.  If they have friends over their friends will have to LEAVE THEIR DEVICES WITH THE SECRET SERVICE AGENT ASSIGNED TO PROTECT THEIR PROPERTY 24/7 and they will get it back when they leave. PERIOD.

ABSOLUTELY NONE of the digital communications this pol & his family will have will be private. NONE.  It will be ALL be archived.  ALL OF IT.  Again, with the FOIA exception for family, which is verified in advance and monitored for integrity.

How extensive will this be?  They will agree, upon election, to turn over (or consent to have FBI collect 😉 TEN YEARS of digital communications. TEN.  Because even 5 years is too few, because it takes about that long to plan a campaign – in some cases – and a particularly clever pol could start scrubbing their life that soon.  No. I want TEN YEARS of ALL digital communications. Phones, faxes, cell phones, internet accounts, ALL of it.  That way they can’t exclude Cousin Susie from the list of those who should be issued federal hardware because ten years of records will show significant communication, thus, warranting inclusion on the list of issuance/monitoring.

The New (Armored) Math

This is why I love American Thinker. Some damned fine reporting is below. Somebody actually sat down and thought it through: Why oh why do we need 2700 armored vehicles in the United States of America? (DHS just ordered them.  They still have that new, tank smell.) Putting aside the question of why on earth we need them at all, and just addressing the sheer size of the order;  maybe we’re just perceiving that number all wrong and maybe that’s what’s creeping us out? After all, America is one damned big country.  Maybe (just go with me here) 2700 isn’t enough rather than a seriously creepy too many?… Eh… Not so much.

Read this one paragraph below from the article “Armored Vehicles for DHS, Slingshots for You” and if this one paragraph doesn’t give you pause, you’re in the wrong place. Go swig some more kool-aid. I can’t help you here.

“According to 2011 Census data, the U.S. has nine cities with populations over one million, and twenty-five more with populations over half a million, but under a million. Let us assign thirty armored vehicles to each of the megacities, and fifteen to each city between half a million and a million. That would be 645 vehicles. Now, for each of the next forty-one cities, down to a quarter million citizens, let us designate ten vehicles, i.e., 410 altogether. That makes 1,055. For the smaller cities, down to a bare one hundred thousand (Broken Arrow, Oklahoma), let’s provide five each, or 1,050. That makes the total 2,105.”